A single coin can change who wins an election, just like one person changing their mind changes the whole game.
Imagine you and your friends are playing a voting game to choose who gets to be the leader of your group. Each person has a vote, which is like a small piece of paper that says who they want to win.
Now, think of a coin as one vote, it’s tiny, but it counts! If everyone votes for the same person, that person wins easily. But if things are close, like it's 50-50, then just one more vote can make all the difference.
The Power of One Vote
If you're the only one who changes your mind and picks a different leader, that one coin (vote) can swing the whole game in favor of the other person. That’s how a single coin, or vote, can change who wins an election!
Sometimes, it's like picking sides in a tug-of-war: if both teams are almost equal, one extra person on a side can make them win. So even though a coin is small, it has big power when the game is close!
Examples
- A coin flip decides who gets the last ballot in a tight election.
- One person’s vote is randomly chosen to be counted or not.
- A coin helps decide which candidate gets more votes in a draw.
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See also
- How Can a Single Vote Change the Whole Election?
- How Can a Single Vote Decide an Election?
- How Does a Pop Vote Really Work in an Election?
- What is Single transferable voting (STV)?
- What is First-past-the-post (FPTP)?